Another feather in the cap that oil and coal are the safest and viable energy sources?

elmo

Now that’s really dim reasoning. Thanks to big oil and Haliburton, gulf seafood is now inedible, unless you don’t mind the carcinogens, shrimp with no eyes, deformed crabs, etc. And how about all the mercury pollution in the air and water from burning coal?

http://twitter.com/majordomo majordomo

They have scrubbers on the coal plants (in the U.S. anyway). Then they take that, re-label it “fluoride” and sell it to your local water district “for your teeth”.

http://www.facebook.com/bud.b.east Bud Back East

My brother-in-law is a Louisiana shrimper for over 30 years. He says that the shrimp this years appear normal, get tested by the government regularly, and pass every inspection. He is there and knows shrimp intimately, while you sit at a computer somewhere else reading alarmist reports. Go there, ask any shrimp boat captain, and then you’ll actually know what you are talking about.

Satariel

I’ll trust the scientists over bubba gump, thanks.

soe schmoe

scientists kinda got us into this mess. i’m not knocking science, just the hubris that accompanies many “scientists”.

InnerCynic

Oh! Great… The man who actually lives and dies with his profession is the ignoramus while the one who gives opinions and runs away to his ivory tower is “god”.

CAmbullrun

Everyone knows the safest energy is renewable. But we can’t tax air for wind power, or sell solar rays for solar power, so it’s kept in the dark. BS

http://www.facebook.com/thehippychef Alan Riner

The technology does not exist yet to handle this situation. Japan will be a wasteland and we are powerless to do anything about it. The whole world will suffer for the greed of just a few.

Bev

The technology would exist to add supports or perhaps to build the needed adjacent container that the water and fuel rods in the existing, collapsing container could “fall” into. I am not an engineer, but I bet this would be an easier task than many that have to be solved associated with Fukushima.

Bev

Correction. Though there are many engineering problems so difficult that have to be done to 100% perfection….my without research notion above about “falling” into containers is a very bad idea. I am not an engineer. For a real nuclear engineer:

The Crisis at Fukushima’s Unit 4 Demands a Global Take-Over
by Harvey Wasserman

We are now within two months of what may be humankind’s most
dangerous moment since the Cuban Missile Crisis.Fukushima’s badly
damaged Unit 4.

There is no excuse for not acting. All the resources our species can
muster must be focused on the fuel pool at Fukushima Unit 4.

Fukushima’s owner, Tokyo Electric (Tepco), says that within as few
as 60 days it may begin trying to remove more than 1300 spent fuel rods
from a badly damaged pool perched 100 feet in the air. The pool rests on
a badly damaged building that is tilting, sinking and could easily come
down in the next earthquake, if not on its own.

Some 400 tons of fuel in that pool could spew out more than 15,000 times as much radiation as was released at Hiroshima.

The one thing certain about this crisis is that Tepco does not have
the scientific, engineering or financial resources to handle it. Nor
does the Japanese government. The situation demands a coordinated
worldwide effort of the best scientists and engineers our species can
muster.

snip

We have two months or less to act.

For now, we are petitioning the United Nations and President Obama
to mobilize the global scientific and engineering community to take
charge at Fukushima and the job of moving these fuel rods to safety.

If you have a better idea, please follow it. But do something and do it now

………….

Arnie Gundersen on a visit to Japan was told that Japan does not
have the money to fix the problem the correct, safest way. This is a
world problem, not just Japan’s. We all need to help.

In order to have the public/government Debt-free, Interest-free
money to fix Fukushima, I think the American Monetary Institute has the
best solution. The site is at http://www.monetary.org/ and is headed by
Stephen Zarlenga, Director, along with former U.S. Representative Dennis
Kucinich. A past supporter is current U.S. Representative John Conyers.
This topic should be foremost to the (all) politicians most affected: U.S.
Senators from California, Oregon and Washington need to be interviewed,
called, emailed, visited about a bill that needs to be re-introduced
fast, HR 2990, see:http://www.monetary.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/HR-2990.pdf

And, a similar bill should be passed in Japan.

Bradtastic

Exactly. but with the best and brightest minds collaborating on this I have no doubt they can make an adequate band-aid at the very least.

Bev

This feels like a crossroad. We get this corrected is the only road to take. And, since Debt Money, lack of money, has stood in the way of all that is needed to concentrate all best efforts, the following is also a crossroad, and the one we should take fast.

So, happily, finally, more coverage of the important way to have the means to fix Fukushima and so much more:

So there is a magic wand after all. A revolutionary paper by the International
Monetary Fund claims that one could eliminate the net public debt of the US
at a stroke, and by implication do the same for Britain, Germany, Italy, or
Japan.

….

If we can do this now, we owe the following organization, the American Monetary Institute, and this group of people our thanks and perhaps even our lives–for being able to fix Fukushima and prevent the further collapse of our homes, cities, societies, countries.

The videos of the 8th Annual Monetary Reform Conference are now available! There are about 25 hours of presentations from our full list of 18 distinguished speakers, including 3 separate panels where our attendees were able to direct the flow of the discussion. This excellent group is listed below and at our conference speaker page. The most recent topics on monetary reform were covered in great detail. A major focus of the conference was the new paper by Dr. Michael Kumhof, Director of Research at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), “The Chicago Plan Revisited.” His entire talk is on the videos, as well as a panel discussing it.

The videos come loaded on an external disc drive with 300 GB of memory,which connects to any computer. Since the videos only take up 100 GB, you get an extra 200 GB of external storage space for you to do with as you please!

What You Will Find

• Stephen Zarlenga, AMI Director, opens the conference with an overview of the American Monetary Institute and its background, methodologies, and objectives for this year’s conference. He also presents the critique of A. Mitchell Innes’ view that money must be debt, and that damage it has done.
• Dr. Michael Kumhof, International Monetary Fund, presents his evaluation of the Chicago Plan using modern economic data and advanced computer modeling.
• Dr. Michael Clark, United Nations, presents on international monetary and financial system reform, discussing how IMF structure and operations can become a positive factor in monetary reform.
• Elizabeth Kucinich addresses the conference on Advocating for Monetary Reform.
• Prof. Kaoru Yamaguchi, Doshisha University, updates his continuing study of the American Monetary Act/HR 2990 and also revisits the 1930s Chicago Plan.
• Prof. Steve Keen, University of Western Sydney, gives a talk on capitalism, credit, crises and asset markets.
• Prof. Michael Hudson, University of Missouri – Kansas City, focuses on the timely monetary developments in Europe.
• Prof. Nicolaus Tideman, Virginia Tech, speaks on money, land, and justice.
• Robert Poteat, AMI Senior Advisor and Northwest Chapter Leader, makes the case for monetary reform in presenting why HR 2990 is needed in order to help resolve one of the great crises we now face.
• Joseph Pijanowski, International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers Union, focuses on American labor and how it can guide a stabilized economy.
• Will Abram, Monetary Scholar, makes a video presentation on the Bank of Canada and its successful decade-long run.
• Jamie Walton, AMI Researcher, speaks on the three main elements of HR 2990 and what they will do.
• Mark Pash, Managing Director MPB Financial Group LLC, highlights the key principles in the Progressive’s role in Macroeconomic decision making.
• David I. Kelley, Legal and Economic Researcher, discusses an economic narrative for progressives and other non-psychopaths.
• Greg Coleridge, Director, Northeast Ohio American Friends Service Committee, discusses how HR 2990 can solve any of the potential financial disasters being discussed and predicted.
• Steven Walsh, AMI Researcher, goes over how the Chicago Teachers Union came to support HR 2990, and detailed steps that can be used to achieve future endorsements of the bill.
• Carol Brouillet discusses Progressive strategies for monetary reform. Carol has run for congress on the Green Party Ticket three times and has been a strong and positive activist in the San Francisco area for more than a decade.
• Joseph Bongiovanni discusses blogging effectively.
• AMI PANEL with Greg Coleridge, Elizabeth Kucinich, Robert Poteat, and Jamie Walton.
• PANEL on Dr. Kumhof’s Paper with Dr. Michael Kumhof, Prof. Steve Keen, Prof. Kaoru Yamaguchi, Jamie Walton, Bob Poteat
• INTERNATIONAL PANEL with Prof. Kaoru Yamaguchi, Prof. Steve Keen, Dr. Michael Kumhof, Prof. Edward Stuart, Dr. Michael Clark.
• Steven Walsh, Jamie Walton, Joe Bongiovanni, and Stephen Zarlenga review Innes’ bad effect on MMT.

Order Form
The Full video set is available for only a $144 donation. Price includes shipping and handling, and orders will be shipped immediately upon receipt.
Mail-in Order Form – Click Here. Checks and credit cards are accepted.
PayPal – click the button below.

They have scrubbers on the coal plants (in the U.S. anyway). Then they take that, re-label it “fluoride” and sell it to your local water district “for your teeth”. Is that correct ?

http://www.salescopywriter.net/ Alan

Pretty much, though most fluoride is a waste product from aluminium plants

http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1058076108 Mark Eccles

Fluoride works on the surface of the teeth. You are not supposed to swallow it.

LordOrlock

They mean water fluoridation. Theyre talking about the small traces of flouride purposely and dubiously put into the water supply, ostensibly to help societies teeth…

derp

They’re after your precious bodily fluids as well!!

http://www.facebook.com/people/Jason-Grant/866085636 Jason Grant

How about no new startups until they do have the tech? Is that something that can be done Alan? Pussies arent gonna fix it either.

soeschmoe

how about no nukes? there are much cheaper and safer ways to boil water.

http://www.facebook.com/thomas.harsley Thomas Harsley

Yeah if those fuel rods become exposed they will irradiate an area the size of NY State. Pollute water off the coast of California and Alaska and sicken the people in and around reactor for decades Oh and for your information Nagasaki has the HIGHEST rates of incurable cancers in the world second is the people evacuated from Chernobyl